World Sight Day 2016 – Universal Eye Health

World Sight Day 2016 – Universal Eye Health is an annual day of awareness held on the second Thursday of October, to focus global attention on blindness and vision impairment. World Sight Day 2016 is on 13 October 2016.

World Sight Day 2016 is the fourth year of the WHO Global Action Plan and IAPB encourages our members and partners to continue with our rolling theme: Universal Eye Health – cataract, glaucoma, diabetes, eye care management.

WSD is co-ordinated by IAPB under the VISION 2020 Global Initiative. The theme, and certain core materials are generated by IAPB. All events are organised independently by members and supporter organisations.

On World Sight Day 2016, Lets work together to: Raise public awareness of blindness & vision impairment as major international public health issues. Influence Governments/Ministers of Health to participate in and designate funds for blindness prevention programmes.

Restorations of sight, and blindness prevention strategies are among the most cost-effective interventions in health care

The number of people blind from infectious causes has greatly reduced in the past 20 years

An estimated 19 million children are visually impaired

About 65 % of all people who are visually impaired are aged 50 and older, while this age group comprises only 20% of the world’s population

Increasing elderly populations in many countries mean that more people will be at risk of age-related visual impairment.

World Sight Day (WSD)

World Sight Day (WSD) is an international day of awareness, held annually on the second Thursday of October to focus attention on the global issue of avoidable blindness and visual impairment. This year World Sight Day falls on 13 October 2016.

WSD is co-ordinated by the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB).

WSD became an official IAPB event in the year 2000, and has been marked in many different ways in countries around the world each year since then.

World Sight Day is the focal Advocacy and PR event for IAPB and its members and partners each year, highlighting the fact that 80% of blindness is avoidable (i.e. preventable and/or treatable) – 4 out of 5 people have avoidable visual impairment. WSD provides a platform for organisations to encourage governments, corporations, institutions and individuals to actively support global blindness prevention efforts.

About Author

a social development organisation is committed to the cause of blind people in our society. Towards this we had made a humble beginning in 2006. It is registered as a Public Charitable Trust under Indian Trust Act, 1882.